sitarman wrote:
The 8 seconds your mention is that with the 1 octave down forward setting? I just tested it with the unison setting (dir 1 knob at about 2 o' clock). And then the maximum delay is exactly 4 seconds. You can play with a metronome at BPM 60 and then the next repeat comes after 4 beats.
The buffer is definitely 8 seconds. The delay depends on the read head position compared to the write head. You could have a very short delay, even in the 8 second buffer. When you switch buffer lengths the read head is spaced at half the buffer length, the furthest place in the buffer in either direction form the write head. So if you have DIR 1 at 2 o clock then switch to the longest buffer, it will be lagging the write head by about 4 seconds. You could try to slow it down, then bring it back to unity. you will see the delay is now longer, you can achieve a max of 8 seconds.
sitarman wrote:
Yes I have noticed that too. In unison mode the repeats come at exactly the same time after the first attack. Therefor you can use it as standard delay pedal and sync it to a beat. Very cool!! But when not in unison mode it is unpredictable when the first repeats comes because you don't know were the write head is. So like you said it can be that some times no repeats are coming. Especially when in octave down setting. Even when having the feedback knob to 100% I sometimes only hear only one repeat when in octave down setting. Would be more 'practical' if the write head would retrigger after the first attack. That way you could also use the other (non-unison) as a standard delay pedal (with pitch changes). Now it is hard to sync the repeats when using other settings than unison.
It's a neat idea but im not sure i would change it to that, also i don;t think the result would be "stnadard" since once you are non unison the delay times are always changing, even if you triggered the heads to some predetermined position. ie after the first repeat the second repeat will come at a different spacing. But triggering it based on your playing is certainly an interesting idea.